This would be a good deal, but I don’t find a Dr. Pepper deal in my Walgreen’s ad. The only soda at 4/$10 in my local ad is for Sunkist, 7Up, Canada Dry or Hawaiian Punch. Pepsi Products are 3/$11. Perhaps the Dr. Pepper is a regional deal? I also did not find any Dr. Pepper coupon in the inserts in this week’s paper – assuming you mean Sunday 11/21. Perhaps that was regional too? Or am I missing something?

I just returned from Walgreens. I bought -among other things – 4 Coffee-Mate Creamers at 2/$2.49, total $4.98. I gave the cashier 2 x $1.50 off 1 plus 2 x $1.00 off 1 manuf coupons, total $5.00, expecting to get them for free. However, the first 3 coupons went through fine, but the last $1 coupon beeped – probably because the coupon total exceeded the purchase price by 2 cents.

I tried to explain to the clerk that he just needed to adjust the coupon value to match the purchase price – per their coupon policy – but he insisted that he couldn’t do that. That, if the register won’t take it, he can’t do anything about it. So I asked him to void the 4 creamers and give me back the coupons – which he did.

However, when all was said and done, my total was less than expected, so when I got home, I carefully studied the receipt. It seems the cashier voided the creamers, but did not void the 3 coupons which he had rung – even though he gave them back to me. So I was given credit for $4 in coupons, but I didn’t buy the product nor surrender the coupons. What would you do in this case?

Strangely – my purchase also included a box of Nabisco Crackers for $1.99 and used an in-ad coupon to reduce the price to 99 cents. I also tendered a $1 off manuf coupon, which the computer took without problem – even though the coupons exceeded the product price by 1 cent. I made a 1 cent profit.

Why did the computer take this cracker deal, but not the creamer deal? Perhaps the computers have a 1 cent tolerance, but not a 2 cent tolerance, as in the creamer deal? Perhaps if I had purchased two creamers at a time for $2.49 and used 1 x $1.50 plus 1 x $1.00 = $2.50, then the computer would have taken it? Or perhaps it had something to do with the in-ad coupon on the crackers, but not on the creamers?

Mary, monthly deals don’t always correspond to the actual month with the drugstore deals. Generally they run for four weeks during a particular month, but they may start slightly earlier or end slightly later depending on how the weeks fall within the month. I believe the December coupons started today for Walgreens, so the November deals would have ended yesterday.

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